WORKERS UNITE FOR WORLD SOCIALISM |
We are facing the largest movement of refugees since the
World War II. The number of people forced to leave their homes rose to a record
60 million last year - with most of those people fleeing Syria's horrific war
or coming from counties such as Afghanistan, Eritrea, Somalia, and Iraq.
Migrants have been making appalling and terrifying journeys and all too often
dying in the process. People don't risk death unless they are desperate for
life. People don't decide to uproot families unless that is the only choice
available. But the response so far has been to vilify the people risking
everything to get here, while fortifying borders: building more walls, erecting
more fences, sending more militarised patrols, and raising the possibility of
bombing the "death boats". As the walls go up around the borders, they
have blocked our capacity to see the connections between foreign policies and
the people living beyond our fortified frontiers. Rather than dream of
permanent relocation, refugees often wish to return home, if they could. 'Humanitarianism'
begins to take on another dimension with walls and warships to turn back
refugees seeking political asylum and sanctuary. Civilians have little option
but to flee their homes from war and conflict, fueled and financed by arms
supplied by the Big Powers and their proxies. Immigrant movements will not stop
by razor wire. It will only force immigrants to change direction not
destination.
Any historian will tell you that the UK is a country built
up by immigrants. Everyone if you go back far enough is either an immigrant or
the descendant of an immigrant. Throughout history immigrant labour had very
solid benefits to society and informed critics know this to be the case. Immigration
has always been a difficult issue for the labour movement. Why is it difficult?
Because ‘common sense’ seems to demonstrate a central principle of capitalist
economics: employment is a function of the simple supply of labour. The view
exists that unemployment therefore occurs because there are too many workers
competing for jobs, not because the system, the employers or the government
determine it. To admit foreign workers, in such a view, is insanity. The real
world is not so simple. Immigration is only part of a complex set of problems
concerning the world’s labour force. Whenever we have high unemployment, those
representing the interests of big business attempt to cover up their own
responsibility for this situation by blaming working people.
Many depart their homelands, leaving behind their families
and friends. Obviously they would not leave in large numbers and emigrate were
it not for the fact that the conditions they are forced to live in are
desperate. There can be no doubt that dire need compels people to abandon their
native land, and that the capitalists exploit the immigrant workers in the most
shameless manner. They leave behind unemployment and hunger to find here
discrimination and prejudice. The wealthy travel because it broadens the mind they
say but the poor travel through necessity. Those politicians who have never
felt it necessary to defend workers’ wages or standards of living are the same
ones who leap to the defence of British workers from the ‘marauding Africa hordes’.
For centuries the blame for terrible social conditions – slum housing, sweatshops
and unemployment has been laid at the door of the immigrant. When working
people are stricken by crisis and in the times of social turmoil and upheaval,
the nationalists thrust themselves to the fore. A picture is being painted of
the Government that has no real control over issues such as immigration. This
notion is very far from the truth. The Government is actually responsible for
much of the “popular” anti-immigration feeling that is expressed, as a working
class divided along national and racial lines is no threat to the capitalist
class. Government also claim that “popular pressure” leads it into setting the
limits and controls. Lift the illegality off the shoulders of those accused of
being illegal and threatened with deportation and you have workers who can organise
and strive for higher wages and conditions. All the mainstream politicians of
the major parties have indulged in attacks on immigrants and immigration for
years. It is necessary for them to have a scapegoat to blame for the ills of
the political system that we live under and the immigrant, present throughout
history, has always served as such a scapegoat.
The growth of migration is enormous and continues to
increase. The conditions in their homelands are the direct result of capitalist
exploitation. For many decades the class which is still exploiting us has been
exploiting them in a most inhuman way. The capitalists drain the wealth from
these countries in the form of raw materials or unprocessed agricultural
products – for which they pay little – and send in return expensive
manufactured goods. They never allow the development of self-sufficient
industries in these countries for they would thereby forfeit their supply of
cheap raw materials. The working people and peasants of these countries are
therefore completely at their mercy. If e.g., the one-crop happens to be sugar,
they must starve while the cane ripens and there is no work. If market prices
fall, they must suffer wage cuts. Can't they find work in their own country?
The answer is no, and one of the reasons for that is globalisation. Large
corporations like to boast how their investments help underdeveloped countries
grow in industrial strength. The truth is a lot different. When corporations
enter an underdeveloped country, they provide jobs for just a handful of people
— at the cost of distorting and retarding economic growth of the country as a
whole. Thus, they are unable to develop many of the basic industries because
the new business enterprises are crushed by giant multi-nationals. When
corporations invest money, large profits are sent back to Wall St or the City
of London for the bankers and shareholders of the corporation. Thus, money is
drained out of many countries of Asian, African, and South American countries,
to enriching the wealthiest segments of society.
The employing class incites the workers of one nation
against those of another in the endeavour to keep them disunited.
Class-conscious workers, realising that the break-down of all the national
barriers by capitalism is inevitable try to help to enlighten and organise
their fellow-workers. Owing to the immaturity of the labour movement, to the
lack of a socialist outlook and of working class theory, they were easily swept
in behind the chauvinist policy of the capitalist class. The age-old tactic of
the capitalist ruling class is to break the unity of the working class. The
ruling class has long known that if it must control people whose numbers are
much greater than its own, sheer physical strength is not enough. The ruling
class must DIVIDE in order to RULE. Meanwhile they distract the working people
of Britain from their own plight. The working class must remember that in their
unity is their strength. That the strength of the working class is all powerful
because it is based on the determination to end all oppression, all
exploitation of man by man, and to oppose all subjection of man on grounds of sex,
nationality, colour, or creed. Unlike the unity of the capitalists it is based
on a total and enduring unity of interests. But in the absence of working class
unity, the strength of the capitalists is greatly increased. Nothing could have
been more dangerous for the ruling classes than that of native and foreign born
workers should make common cause, as they are doing today, and instead of
fighting each other join forces and fight employers. There is indeed a need for
‘integration’ and of ‘multi-culturalism’ but no socialist is going to be
associated with moves to rob people of their culture and customs.
When they say: – “The immigrants are taking your jobs,” we
answer: – This is a lie. It is not true that increased immigration leads to
increased unemployment. It is the capitalist system which causes unemployment
as it did in the 1920s and the 30s. Then the scapegoat were the Irish. Another lie
blaming the newcomers for the housing shortage and the increased demand upon
the social services such as the hospitals and schools. It is necessary
constantly here to emphasise the important contribution made to those social
services. Nor do not forget that a higher proportion of migrants from Eastern
Europe, for instance, entered the country as fit and available workers, whom the
capitalist State is not require to “raise” and “educate”. Immigrants and
refugees are not a drain on the social security system – in fact, the evidence
shows they contribute far more to the system than they receive in return.
Capitalism needs nation states – to regulate relations
between firms; to impose common laws and currency which aid capital
accumulation; to organise labour markets and the provision of education,
transport and healthcare and to try to prevent recession turning into economic
collapse. In fact the deeper the crisis, the greater the tensions between
firms, the more the competition heats up, the more the state is needed to
impose some sort of ‘order’. So today, far from the state disappearing, it
plays an increasingly important function in the regulation of the world economy
such as we see in Europe and the Euro. The state also has a role to play in
aiding and assisting in the exploitation of the workforce – hence the use of
immigration controls. On the one hand those who own and control the wealth want
the freedom to make as much profit whenever and however they want. But at the
same time the system is based on oppression and exploitation, so they demand
the right to restrict the freedom and movement of labour. These restrictions
take the form both of attacking trade unions at ‘home’, and also controlling
those that are forced to seek to pastures new.
Immigration control has nothing to do with ‘flooding’ the
labour market or any such nonsense. Automatically, immigration corresponds to
the needs of the economy. Similarly, in close capitalist logic, immigration
does not in any way aggravate the shortage of social services, since the
immigrant brings with him not only his or her body, which has to be housed, but
also his and her work, which helps to build the house. Immigration control is nationalistic
legislation. It cannot be contemplated by a socialist, for its whole rationale
is founded on the nation state and the feverish competition in which that
nation state is engaged. This struggle between nation states has two main
effects. It splits and divides workers from their main objectives, and, in the
long run, weakens their strength all over the world. While the battle between
nation states continues there remains no chance for a switch in resources from
the ‘developed’ to the ‘underdeveloped’ world. The socialist case does not stop
with opposition to border control but extends to making it clear that we are
looking for a system where people are not forced through economic circumstances
to leave the homes and cultures they know and understand. Socialists must make
it clear that they are opposed to anti-immigrant propaganda, opposed to
immigration control, not for any abstract principle, but because of the need of
workers of all nationalities, to forge a weapon which, unlike immigration
control, will carve out the highest standards of life and living for all
workers.
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